Signs You Have an Unhealthy Relationship with Food
About Eating Disorders
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Seen Between Anxiety, Eating Disorders
Researchers find children who suffer anxiety are more prone
to develop eating disorders later in life. The most common
disorder was obsessive-compulsive disorder, present in
almost half of the group.
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Eating disorders both are and are not what they sound like. On the one
hand,
eating disorders are a group of symptoms with one of the primary
problems being an unhealthy relationship with food. On the other hand, the
symptoms of an eating disorder are methods used to cope or manage other
problems in an individual’s life, problems that are unique to each person.
Below we describe the features of eating disorders to give you some ways
to tell if you or someone you know has an unhealthy relationship with food.
Seeing if you have these problems is the first step. Treatment involves both
learning how to manage the symptoms themselves, figuring out how the
symptoms help the individual to cope, and learning alternative ways to cope
that are more effective.
People are told “You have an eating disorder” when they have several of
these features. However, the more we learn about these disorders, the more
we realize that meeting all the “criteria” is not what is important. People
who only have some of these features are often experiencing as much
unhappiness and distress as someone who has all of them. Ask yourself if any
of these features bother you or interfere with your life (happiness, job,
school, relationships,) or interferes with the life of the person with whom
you are concerned.
FEATURE 1: The individual has an unhealthy relationship with food.
Food is supposed to nourish our bodies. We need food to live. When eating
becomes a source of guilt, shame, or fear then this relationship has become
unhealthy. Eating should be one of many activities in an individual’s life.
When an individual is preoccupied with food, this relationship is unhealthy.
An unhealthy relationship with food takes many forms:
- Having rigid rules about food
For example, people may create rules about:
- foods that are allowed versus foods that are forbidden
- the time of day that it is permissible to eat
- the amount of food that they are “allowed” to eat
- Feeling guilty about eating
- Engaging in
eating binges
- Binges are characterized by feeling loss of control over eating
- The eating often occurs at a pace that is faster than usual
- The eating episodes are usually followed by feelings of guilt
and shame
FEATURE 2: The individual has an unhealthy relationship with his or her
body. This may take one or all of the following forms:
-
Valuing body weight and/or appearance as
the most important aspect of their self-worth
-
Having difficulty interpreting the body’s
internal signals (of hunger, of satiety, of emotions, etc.)
-
Having a distorted view of their bodies
-
Feeling very dissatisfied and/or unhappy
with their physical appearance
-
Feel preoccupied with their physical
appearance to the degree that it interferes with other important aspects
of their life (job, school, relationships)
FEATURE 3: The individual engages in unhealthy weight regulation
practices. Rather than viewing food and eating as nourishment and
self-care, people with eating disorders are often not comfortable with the
act of eating and may engage in unhealthy behaviors in an effort to reduce
this guilt. These behaviors may include:
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